Jane Austen discussion
Mansfield Park 2017 Discussion
>
Vol. 1 chaps 9-18
date
newest »

message 1:
by
SarahC, Austen Votary & Mods' Asst.
(new)
Jul 15, 2017 08:02AM

reply
|
flag
I am traveling due to family concerns; I apologize...this and my delays in posting were unexpected. I will fall in with you lovely people as soon as possible.

Sending good thoughts your way, Sarah!


Up until this time, Tom was really the only one who left MP and engaged with the real world. We see how easily he was influenced to act in a like manner to this friends and associates… even at the cost to his family and younger brother. His moral compass was exposed and revealed in his comment, after Sir Thomas gave his blistering interview, when he said that he wasn’t half as in debt as some of his friends.
Maria and Julia were enamored immediately with Henry. Maria now had someone to compare Mr. Rushworth to and the poor guy fell short, despite his being a tall fellow. The sisters now knew, or thought they did, what a true gentleman was. Little were they aware of the flirtations of the ton or the way in which town gentlemen played with the affections of females. Their limited exposure to this was to their detriment.
Edmund was like any male finding himself in the presence of a beautiful, well dressed, accomplished female. She simply bowled him over. Everything he knew about himself and what he wanted in life was turned on its ear, including his moral compass. Because Fanny was a solid and steadfast safe haven, he often turned to her. She thought and felt the way he did, because he taught her. When he felt his resolve wavering, he sought her advice… but, then, he didn’t follow it.
Mary and Henry saw Mansfield Park as a respite from the hustle and bustle of town. It’s like going on vacation. At first you can’t stand the silence and the quiet lifestyle and then, you can’t imagine any other way of life. But soon you have to return to reality.



As for Edmund, it's hard to discuss this since Austen doesn't really mention anything about it until later in the novel, but he has had limited exposure to women. Although he's met plenty of pretty girls, I think, he hasn't met with many intelligent women beyond his family circle. So, I think you're right about the effect Miss Crawford has on him. I'm not sure if it's particularly about her or if another pretty, intelligent woman would have been able to blind him so easily. What gets me is his blindness to it. And he's almost as blind to Fanny's opinions as Mrs. Norris, in the sense that he asks for her advice and then twists her words to agree with his own ideas. In his defense, Fanny never speaks out very strongly against anything other than acting herself, since she's so used to being silenced and not trusting her own opinions.



Since Edmund is going to be a clergyman, would he have had to attend university? I figured he would have, but I don't recall mention of it. What about being sent away to school like Harrow or Eton?
Also, why did the Bertram girls never get a season in London or perhaps Bath? It seems like they are well situated enough that they should have gone beyond their local society. I wonder what would have happened if they had more exposure. I also wonder how Maria would have gotten on in London if she had went as a newlywed to London, if Sir Thomas had not told them to await his return and she had not met Henry.

And I suspect the girls didn’t get a Season because of their mother’s indolence, coupled with their father’s worries about money (sending him off to Antigua) and Mrs. Norris’s parsimony.



The girls having a Season would have given them a sense of their own consequence. Yes, they had beauty, fortune and connections... but, in the overall scheme of things... they would have had a better idea of who they were. As it was... they were at the peak of their limited society and unable to compare themselves to others. I'm not saying it well. Their sense of entitlement needed a reality check.

Talking about Henry Crawford, I never read Mansfield Park without feeling a little sorry for him: all that talent and potential he had and all wasted on the altar of vanity and pleasure-hunting. The same goes for Mary. She, with all her faults and upbringing, has more depth and feeling than either Maria or Julia and of course she is way cleverer.

Yeah, Henry is to be pitied... he couldn't see the tree for the forest. Fanny was an angel of his own creation. He had built up a fantasy that was not Fanny. He saw her through a rose colored lens and could not see the real her. They were so opposite in character, beliefs, consequence and connections. He thought he could parade her before all his former conquests and show what could really attract him. Never once did he see that this would have broken the spirit of such a creature that was Fanny Price.
Mary also saw things through her on colored lens. This brother-sister duo saw, but did not see; heard, but did not hear what was right in front of them. I felt sorry for both of them. Their background tainted their future happiness.

Yeah, Henry is to be pitied... he couldn't see the tree for the forest. Fanny was an angel of his own creation. He had built up a fantasy th..."
The idea of the 'coloured lens' is so true. It seems to be a recurring theme of the book, the characters all seeing though their own filters, rather than seeing the truth of themselves and each other.
Fanny is the only one who really sees what is going on between everyone around her, but I think even she is part-blind towards Edmund, and very blind later on in her fantasies about her loving family in Portsmouth.





In Mary's dialog, she sometimes says things about herself to Edmund and Fanny that aren't very nice, but I don't think anyone listens.

Mary is a fascinating character, almost chameleon-like, she talks one way in public, another way in private with her brother and half-sister, Edmund later complains that she talks completely different again when with her worldly friends in town. She flatters, she self-deprecates to make herself seem more charming, she uses French words to sound more stylish and educated - Just like Lona says - her character is revealed through Austen's use of dialogue.
I think the reason Edmund and Fanny don't seem to be listening to Mary when she's saying negative things about herself, is because they don't speak the same language as her. She is saying what she doesn't mean to create an effect, and they don't have it in them to play such language games.


I am finally in the discussion -- so glad to be here. You are all thinking about the same points as I have been with these characters. I like examining that Sotherton trip also. So many things play out here to start building the structure of these relationships. Yes -- the barouche ride. The rivalry between sisters, where we clearly see that Maria is now feeling that a relationship with Henry might unfold. And the misery and jealousy she experiences as Julia sits beside Henry for the whole trip. Good job Jane Austen for this fine episode on this Henry-Maria-Julia subject.
There is also the scene with undercurrents when they discuss the upcoming wedding while in the small Sotherton family chapel.
And the tension is introduced regarding Mary's disapproval of Edmund's future as a minister. Also, the jealousy of Rushworth comes out with his "In my opinion, these Crawfords are no addition at all. We did very well without them."
There is also the scene with undercurrents when they discuss the upcoming wedding while in the small Sotherton family chapel.
And the tension is introduced regarding Mary's disapproval of Edmund's future as a minister. Also, the jealousy of Rushworth comes out with his "In my opinion, these Crawfords are no addition at all. We did very well without them."
Hannah wrote: "I don't know that the Bertram ladies had any less exposure to society than anyone else in a country area at the time. They hadn't been to town, but they'd certainly been to lots of balls, and there..."
I think as we go into the next reading section, we can discuss this more as the story goes along...but is Edmund fascinated by Mary's boldness and modernity? These parts of Mary seem in conflict with who Edmund is, but is that the thing? -- which, to me, is a separate thing from beauty and intellect. The is blunt. I also have been thinking that she puts herself forward in a room or a gathering of people. That action of a woman was very unknown to him probably. I have known of people sort of curious/fascinated/attracted/shocked by another person and who pursued a relationship due to that mix.
I think as we go into the next reading section, we can discuss this more as the story goes along...but is Edmund fascinated by Mary's boldness and modernity? These parts of Mary seem in conflict with who Edmund is, but is that the thing? -- which, to me, is a separate thing from beauty and intellect. The is blunt. I also have been thinking that she puts herself forward in a room or a gathering of people. That action of a woman was very unknown to him probably. I have known of people sort of curious/fascinated/attracted/shocked by another person and who pursued a relationship due to that mix.


Sarah,
Also, since the family are not in the habit of going to town, aside from the things that you mentioned regarding Mary's appeal, she also has the appeal of novelty. Edmund has most likely known all of the other young ladies of the neighborhood for all of their lives and his as well.

Lona,
Your comments and Abigail's have inspired me to read this section again.
Your comments are very insightful and appreciated!


Hi Mrs!
Now that you mention these similarities between each Edmund and Darcy attraction to Mary and Lizzie, I have to agree.
However, Darcy's attraction to Lizzie is combined with full knowledge of the downside or evils of marrying her. In Edmunds case, the force of the evils of marrying Mary aren't as strong (view spoiler)

I agree, and I love the Sotherton scene because of the symbolism, which, as you say, is not commonly done by Austen.
There's Mary tempting Edmund down 'serpentine' paths in the woods, and Maria standing at the bars of Mr Rushton's locked gates crying 'I can't get out', while Fanny begs her not to slip round the gate and run off with Henry because she will surely get hurt...lots of wonderful foreshadowing.


We see the avarice Mrs. Norris [getting what she could for nothing].
Lady Bertram too indolent to even attempt the call even on behalf of her daughter and her future family.
Maria was presented with the wealth of Mr. Rushworth, but perhaps, realizing now it might not be enough... thus, her statement mentioned above. So... true to her nature... she 'ran off' with Henry into the wilds of the estate.
This should have been a heads up for Julia... of being left behind by her sister. In a sense Maria 'ran off' with what should have been Julia's beau. A lot of foreshadowing in this trip.
Even Edmund was not exempt. For all his goodness... he left Fanny alone... and forgot her... not even realizing the time. They all were unchaperoned as they broke away... if you get down to it.

Ye fallen avenues! once more I mourn
Your fate unmerited, etc. A few lines later, there is this:
We tread the wilderness, whose well-roll’d walks,
With curvature of slow and easy sweep—
Deception innocent—give ample space
To narrow bounds.
This is exactly what Mary and Edmund were flirtatiously arguing about when they walked in the wilderness! JA must have been making a sly reference to this poem, which would have been well-known to her educated readers of the day.
Doncha think!



I'll be reading through your comments and posting if I have anything to add.